This appeal arises from the decision by a federal magistrate to present to an inmate’s attorney a Federal Bureau of Investigation report containing the names and unredacted confidential statements of prison informants who implicated the inmate in a prison murder. The magistrate ordered the release of this information following a remand from this Court in
Wagner v. Williford,
I.
The underlying facts of this case are adequately discussed in our decision in
Wagner v. Williford,
On remand from Wagner I, the magistrate ordered evidentiary hearings where the government presented evidence concerning the need for maintaining the confidentiality of the information as well as the informants’ identity in order to assure the safety of the informants. Thе government further claimed that inadvertent disclosure of confidential information was a major risk to informants and that even redaction of a confidential report added to this risk. Wagner’s attorney, on the other hand, presented evidence concerning the necessity of access to such information to prepare an effective defense.
On September 16, 1988, the magistrate, without making any written findings based on the evidence presented, entered an order requiring total disclosure of the FBI report to defendant’s attorney, including the informants’ names and their unredaеted statements pursuant to the following procedures:
A. Professor Eisenberg [Wagner’s counsel] will be allowed to examine all materials obtained from confidential sources which had previously been submitted for in camera inspection and which were relied upon by the IDC in petitioner’s case.
B. The insрection will take place in the United States Magistrate’s Conference Room. The records and reports will not be redacted. Professor Eisenberg will be allowed to make notes if he feels they will aid his argument to the court. Said argument to the court regarding the sufficiency of the evidence and the reliability, or lack thereof, of any confidential informant shall take place immediately following counsel’s viewing of the records. Any notes made by Professor Eisenberg pursuant to his inspection of the confidential materials will be collected by a United States Marshal and promptly destroyed. No notes, photocopies, or other record of the inspection will be retained by Professor Eisenberg.
C. Petitioner, James Wagner, shall not be present when the records are viewed nor during counsel’s argument to the court.
D. Following Professor Eisenberg’s argument, the defense will have an opportunity to respond.
*580 E. No transcript of the proceedings shall be prepared or obtained without prior approval of the court.
F. Following argument by counsel, the Clerk is directed to place the file under seal and store it in a safe and secure location.
G. Prоfessor Eisenberg shall not discuss with his client or any other person any matter learned by him during the inspection of the confidential materials.
sjs * * * ¡fc *
(emphasis added)
On October 2, 1988, the magistrate drafted an order (“secrecy order”), that stated his order from the 16th of September was to be held under seal and that no one was to notify anyone, including Wagner, that his attorney would be allowed access to the confidential information. The magistrate also ordered the release of the confidential documents on November 3, 1988, but stayed the proceedings pending the government’s timely appeal.
II.
The government petitions this Court to reconsider the Wagner I opinion and in the alternative to find the magistrate’s order not in compliance with the directives contained therein. These requests arise from the government’s perceived increased risk of the inadvertent disclosure of government informants’ identities arising from the magistrate’s order.
The government invites us to reconsider our decision in
Wagner I
in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
In
Ritchie,
the Supreme Court considered a case involving a criminal defendant convicted in state court of various sexual offenses who sought documents maintained by a child protective service agency that were confidential under a Pennsylvania statute. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court found that the defendant had a federal constitutional right to have his attorney review the documents. The United States Supreme Court affirmed that part of the decision of the Pennsylvania сourt finding that Ritchie’s attorney had the right under due process to review relevant information in the documents. The Court held, however, that defense counsel has no constitutional right to conduct a search of the documents to determine relevance. Rather, the defendant’s interest in a fаir trial can be fully protected by an
in camera
determination of relevant documents to be used by defense counsel.
Ritchie,
Wagner I
is entirely consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in
Ritchie.
In
Wagner I,
we stated that “[t]he objective must always be to provide defense counsel with as much information as possible ... [and] there may have been some quantum of information that would have assisted petitioner’s attorney, yet would not if revealed necessarily have led to identification of the informants.”
Wagner,
Our review of
Ritchie
is also supported by the Eleventh Circuit’s reading of it in
Miller v. Dugger,
*581
The government’s second contention on appeal, that the magistrate exceeded the
Wagner I
remand when he ordered the release of all the confidential information to Wagner’s attorney, is more compеlling. In applying
Wagner I,
the magistrate made the proper presumption that the risk of intentional disclosure by Wagner’s attorney is “negligible in this case.” We have previously held that district courts need not make specific findings on this issue, since attorneys, as officers of the court, are presumptively trustwоrthy absent specific evidence of untrustworthiness.
See Wagner,
The magistrate, however, misinterpreted the full extent of the second step of the
Wagner I
analysis. That prong requires the district court to consider the risk of inadvertent disclosure and “make full use of procedures such as
redaction
in order to fashion an appropriate
compromise
between the inmate’s right to effective assistance of counsel and the necessity of protecting informant anonymity.”
Wagner,
In this respect, we note that a district court and magistrate must follow an appellate court’s remand.
Ohio-Sealy Mattress Mfg. Co. v. Sealy, Inc.,
On further remand, the court is to carefully consider its options and state fully for the record its conclusions that support the relief granted. In carrying out this task the magistrate must be careful not to “adopt a general rule allowing inmates’ counsel access to investigative reports containing confidential information.”
Wagner,
Therefore, when we stated in
Wagner I
that the court should consider “whether options existed, short of withholding the report entirely, to allow Wagner’s attorney access to the confidential information without endangering the sources of that information,”
Wagner,
Also before this Court is Wagner’s motion to vacate the secrecy order imposed by the magistrate. That order is hereby vacated by this Court. However, such an order may be crucial in reducing the risk of inadvertent disclosure and keeping the informants’ identities undisclosed and can be reinstated by the magistrate if determined to be appropriate in refashiоning its new relief.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, this case is remanded back to the district court to make an in camera review of the documents and evidence presented to it. In this review, the court should consider the risk of inadvertent disclosure and appropriate procedures that can bе undertaken to avoid that risk, and must provide its findings in writing. In this respect, if the court determines a redacted document will provide only a minimal risk of disclosure of the informants’ identities then the redacted document may be released to Wagner’s attorney. On the other hand, if the court determines that the risk is tоo great or the material is irrelevant, then the documents should remain sealed and unavailable to defendant’s counsel. Accordingly, the orders of the magistrate are Vaoated and we Remand for further proceedings pursuant to this opinion.
Notes
. The parties in this case consented to trial before a magistrate pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), and as such, an appeal from a judgment entered upon the direction of the magistrate shall be heard by the court of appeals. Fed.R.App.P. 3.1. This Court, therefore, has jurisdiction to hear this case on direct appeal and we need not decide the consolidated action for mandamus which presents the same facts and requests the same relief.
